from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

v. To emotionally or artistically satisfy; to develop one's gifts to the fullest.

v. To obey, follow, comply with (a rule, requirement etc.).

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English

transitive v. To fill up; to make full or complete.

transitive v. To accomplish or carry into effect, as an intention, promise, or prophecy, a desire, prayer, or requirement, etc.; to complete by performance; to answer the requisitions of; to bring to pass, as a purpose or design; to effectuate.

They regularly go to church on Sundays and Holy Days, of which there are countless numbers, cross themselves repeatedly when they pass a church or Icon, take the holy communion at stated seasons, rigorously abstain from animal food, not only on Wednesdays and Fridays but also during Lent and the other long fasts, make occasional pilgrimages to the holy shrines and in a word fulfill carefully the ceremonial observance which they suppose necessary for their salvation.

Mark Strong: He was the same, because really the dictate on set that you have to fulfill is the same whether you’re doing a small budget movie or a big budget movie because essentially it’s the actor’s truth and the camera rolling.

While many of my staff are empowered to use my name and therefore my authority to accomplish my goals through them, sometimes they succumb to the temptation to use my name to fulfill their own agenda, not mine.

In fact, I think what we ` re seeing in the Bush administration, actually, is a-- what I would call neo-Wilsonianism, a latter-day Wilsonianism, in which the president, I think, also feels very much that he is doing what is -- it is his destiny that God has given him to fulfill, which is very similar to what Woodrow Wilson believed at Versailles.